| greenhouse effect |
Warming of the lower layers of the atmosphere due to its different absorption properties for long and short-wave radiation.
Ãâó: www.palmbeachdailynews.com/weather/content/shared/...
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|---|---|
| greenhouse effect |
The process where incoming shortwave radiation passes through the atmosphere, but the re-radiated longwave energy from the Earth is trapped by the gasses and heats the atmosphere.
Ãâó: academic.venturacollege.edu/spalladino/geosci/geog...
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| green |
Too acidic, raw, vegetal or herbal; a wine can taste "green" due to underripe grapes or stems, but such an impression may simply mean the wine needs time to develop.
Ãâó: www.wineaccess.com/expert/tanzer/glossary.html
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| green b. |
popular name for either deuteranopia or protanopia.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| green h. |
Veratrum viride.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| green | dichromacy characterized by a lowered sensitivity to green light resulting in an inability to distinguish green and purplish-red |
|---|---|
| green | suspicious or unduly suspicious or fearful of being displaced by a rival |
| green | a feeling of jealous envy (especially of a rival) |
| green | towhee of the Rocky mountain region |
| green | common teal of Eurasia and North America |
| green | a piece of paper money (especially one issued by a central bank) |
| green | a former political party in the United States |
| green | a belt of parks or rural land surrounding a town or city |
| green | blowfly with brilliant coppery green body |
| green | blowfly with brilliant coppery green body |
| green | a very prickly woody vine of the eastern United States growing in tangled masses having tough round stems with shiny leathery leaves and small greenish flowers followed by clusters of inedible shiny black berries |
| green | English Catholic novelist (1904-1991) |
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